Tom Smith 4 | 05/01/2013 15:57:38 |
7 forum posts | I am looking for a CNC shop to mill some golf putter heads for me. I am in the early stages of building a new company, so volume will be low at first. However, my goals are to grow quickly and I would like to find a machinist that I can develop a longer term relationship with who can help me grow my business and share in some of the benefits of that growth. Whilst low cost is obviously a factor, it is not the sole motivator for me. I do not have a background in machining and would appreciate a shop that can give me guidance on CAD designs to help reduce milling costs. I also foresee working through multiple prototypes prior to ordering large production runs, so a shop that isn't aderse to doing some one-off prototypes with the understanding that they will lead to larger orders in the future would be good. Ideally, I would like to develop a business relationship with a machinist where in exchange for good service and fair pricing I will steer all of my business to a single supplier. I am not interested in bidding out project after project searching for the lowest cost supplier, nor am I seeking unreasonable trade terms or credit. I will pay cash on delivery. I am based in Kent, so a local shop would be good, but anywhere in the UK is fine. I am currently in the process of finishing off two designs that are ready to prototype. I would like 2 prototypes of each design. After testing the designs and getting some feedback, I will place an order for 25-50 of each design. Further designs will be forthcoming, hopefully with ever increasing volumes. So I would like a price for both the prototype run and the production run of 25-50 of each. The putters are to be milled out of carbon steel. Please PM me or contact me on the email address below.
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Sandy Morton | 05/01/2013 17:29:15 |
104 forum posts | hth. Almost all the putters which I have ever used were made from diecast material - even the stainless ones appeared to be that way, the only obviously "machined" (tapered reamer) part was the hole for the shaft. Posted here for comments and helpful suggestions. |
Ady1 | 05/01/2013 17:44:52 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | |
blowlamp | 05/01/2013 17:57:04 |
![]() 1885 forum posts 111 photos | Tom. How do you intend to deliver your design to the machinist - as a CAD or a CAM model? Martin. |
Tom Smith 4 | 05/01/2013 21:06:31 |
7 forum posts | Hi Martin, A friend of mine is drawing up the designs on CAD. These appears to be the easiest method, but as mentioned my knowledge of machining is slim! |
Brian Wood | 08/01/2013 16:08:19 |
2742 forum posts 39 photos | Hello Tom, I have personal experience of this man's work and he is happy to tackle most challenges. It would be worth contacting him, he can also write the CAM software to execute the job. www.sykesengineering.com The company is based in North Yorkshire at Leeming Bar, I don't know how that squares with you for distance from your base. Best wishes Brian PS PM sent as well Edited By Brian Wood on 08/01/2013 16:16:28 |
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